Shannon here! And I am in disbelief! June is almost over. Can you believe it?

You’ve been living it up, right? Letting yourself DO SUMMER? You’re remembering that you only get a handful of summers as a teen and you’re taking full advantage?
GOOD! I knew you could do it.

On Wednesday, Jill gushed about our time at Southern California Christian Writers’ Conference, but I’ll feel left out if I don’t get to tell you how much I enjoyed being around so many writerly souls and ALL THOSE TEEN WRITERS! It really was fantastic and I learned a lot. I wish we could take you all with us when we do these things.

Today, we’re continuing our summer panel series. Each of us are answering a single writing question, just as if we’re sitting on a panel at a writing conference and we would LOVE for you to join us and share your answer as well.

 

Which aspect of the craft do you work hardest at?

 

Stephanie Morrill
Describing things in interesting ways. I tend to have pet words or pet descriptions that I fall back on way too much, and I have to work hard in my edits to make that piece of my manuscript more original.
Jill Williamson
I struggle with pacing. I get really caught up in conversations my characters are having with each other. I’ll write huge scenes that don’t advance the plot, but I have fun writing them, so I have to cut them later, which makes me grouchy because I liked those conversations. I think part of that is discovering my characters. I’ll piggyback on this what Stephanie said about pet words or pet descriptions. I’ve noticed that a lot lately too. I usually catch these when I’m reading my story out loud. And if I catch the same word, more than three times on one page, I’ll search the whole novel so I can change a lot of them out. 
Shannon Dittemore
I adore well-written dialogue, so I work on that a lot. I pay attention to conversations and I scratch out ideas I have that come to me while I’m out and about. I email myself witty bits and anything that I might find deeply profound. I let myself replay awkward real-life conversations so I can choose my words more carefully. I replay conversations in different tones of voice, different contexts. Basically, I talk to myself a lot! I am never not working on dialogue.
How about you all? Is there an aspect of the writing craft that you feel you work harder at than others?